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: Britain
Britains trade union federation lines up behind Bush/Blair
war drive
By Julie Hyland
14 September 2002
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The annual conference of the Trades Union Congress (TUC) provided
a showcase for the type of sycophancy and cowardice one has come
to expect from Britains trade unions.
Throughout the previous week, the media had been forecasting
a major confrontation between the unions and Prime Minister Tony
Blair over the latters support for a US-led war against
Iraq. News commentators predicted that Blair would be walking
into the lions den when he delivered his conference
speech on September 10, and would receive a savage mauling.
Kittens would have caused more damage. Not only did the TUC
give the green light to war, it ensured Blair did not face even
a peep of opposition throughout his 36-minute address.
The prime ministers trouble-free appearance was guaranteed
when, just one day before his speech, the ruling council mobilised
three of the four largest unions to defeat an amendment pledging
the TUC to oppose any war against Iraq.
Having failed to pressure the small rail union TSSA (Transport
Salaried Staffs Association) to withdraw its amendment, the executive
provocatively denounced the motion as tantamount to treachery,
with Roger Lyons, joint general secretary of the Amicus engineering
union, claiming it could have been drawn up by the trades
council of Baghdad.
When the amendment was initially passed on a show of hands,
the executive forced a formal card vote and the union bureaucracy
fell quickly into line. The block votes of the major unionsincluding
the TGWU (Transport and General Workers Union), whose leader
Bill Morris had earlier told the conference read my lips,
no warensured the amendment was defeated.
Whilst the successful general council resolution declared its
unambiguous opposition to unilateral action against
Iraq, and expressed concern at the increasingly bellicose
statements made by members of the Bush administration, it
stipulated that military action could be justified if it had UN
authorisation and there was evidence that the country was developing
weapons of mass destruction.
Interviewed on the BBC, TUC General Secretary John Monks made
clear the unions had no principled objections to a war. The
TUC is not a pacifist organisation and it has supported British
forces on many, many occasions, Monks reminded the interviewer.
Its concern was with the processes which are used. For example,
is there evidence? Have the weapons inspectors been allowed in?
Are the United Nations involved?
TUC leaders fear that Blairs support for a pre-emptive
attack on Iraq by the US could isolate Britain internationally,
especially in Europe where Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder has denounced
US plans and made clear Germany will not participate. Under these
conditions the TUC considers UN authorisation desirable to provide
the cover of international endorsement.
John Edmonds, leader of the GMB general union, spelt it out.
The TUC had sent a clear signal that if the prime minister stood
alongside the UN, he could expect the full support of the Labour
Party and the trade unions, he pledged.
But in his speech Tuesday, the prime minister made clear that
whilst the US and the UK would ask for UN support, they would
go it alone if necessary. The US and the UK would respond
to challenges to deal with Iraq through the UN, Blair conceded,
But if we do so, then the challenge to all in the UN is
this: the UN must be the way to resolve the threat from Saddam,
not a way of avoiding it.
The prime minister also warned the TUC that if it persisted
with self-indulgent rhetoric, it would be the one
to risk isolation as far as the government was concerned.
Blair has the measure of the TUC. He knows that the Labour
Partys abandonment of social reformism and its disassociation
from the working class would never have been possible without
trade union backing. Pledged to defend the interests of British
capital, the TUC has been instrumental in strangling workers
resistance to the constant undermining of their pay and working
conditions. Under Blair, the unions have played a key role in
enabling the government to cut public spending and hold down wages,
whilst ensuring industrial unrest has been kept at a record low.
Blair reminded the TUC where its loyalties lie. Partnership
between government and the unions does far more good than
a lot of self-indulgent rhetoric from a few that belongs, quite
frankly, in the history books, he told the conference.
Such self-indulgence would lead to less influence
with his government, he warned. If the TUC cooperated, however,
the government would make sure there was room for its snout at
the trough. Promising government support for British entry into
the single European currency, the euroa goal supported by
most of the unionsBlair went on to praise the TUC for its
role in ensuring the smooth passage of Labours workfare
policies and promised to involve it in discussions with the Confederation
of British Industry over pension reform.
I offer again a partnership on this basis. No prejudices.
No pre-conceptions. On either side.... My door is open to any
union leader, the prime minister said.
This ensured the prime minister received a standing ovation
from much of the audience, with TUC President Sir Tony Young praising
Blair for his truly inspirational remarks. You
have shown the glass is half full ... more than half full,
Young told Blair.
John Edmonds commented that the speech was beautifully
crafted. There were no indications that he wants to
start a new love affair with the unions, but perhaps there were
signs that he might be prepared to start a subtle courtship,
he said.
And what of the erstwhile lefts, whom the petty-bourgeois
radical groups around the Socialist Alliance had backed for election,
claiming they represented a militant alternative to the union
tops?
They either kept their mouths firmly shut, like Bob Crow of
the RMT rail union, whose only gesture of defiance was to remain
seated for Blairs ovation; or, in the case of Derek Simpson,
general secretary-elect of Amicus, gushed about how happy he was
that the prime ministers remarks fitted in with everything
he had been saying.
See Also:
Bush at the UN: Washingtons war
ultimatum to the world
[13 September 2002]
Britain: Blair spurns popular opposition
to back US war vs. Iraq
[10 September 2002]
Oppose US war against Iraq!
Build an international movement against imperialism!
[9 September 2002]
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